http://scroll.in/article/776269/another-intolerance-debate-why-the-silencing-of-scholarship-in-udaipur-needs-to-be-taken-seriously

OPINION
Another intolerance debate: Why the silencing of scholarship in
Udaipur needs to be taken seriously

The attempt to prosecute academics for quoting 'blasphemous' thoughts,
when they were actually countering western interpretations, puts the
focus on the insidious way in which free expression on campus is being
undermined.
Apoorvanand  · Yesterday · 06:00 pm

There are various reasons why our state universities seem to have no
intellectual life. One of them is the rising intolerance against
scholarship – in and outside the campus.

The most recent warning bell was heard from Udaipur. The authorities
of the Mohanlal Sukhadia University  decreed last  week  that for any
lecture to be organised on the campus,  a written script of it will
have to be submitted beforehand. Permission will be given only after
scrutiny by a committee.

This came in the wake of protests by Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh from
December 4 to 6 for alleged act of blasphemy against Hindu gods and
goddesses in a lecture in Udaipur on December 3 on the need for
dialogue on religion.

The lecture was delivered by Professor Ashok Vohra, a well-known
scholar, who retired as the head of the Department of Philosophy of
Delhi University recently, who was invited by Professor Sudha
Chaudhary on behalf of the Department of Philosophy of Mohanlal
Sukhadia University under the Indian Council of Philosophical Research
extension lecture series.

A first information report was eventually  registered against
Professor Vohra by the police after the minister of human resource
development of the government of Rajasthan himself called the local
authorities and instructed them to initiate action against Professor
Vohra but the agitators  wanted Professor Sudha Chaudhary to be named
in the FIR as well.

This was not all. Serving Vice Chancellors of two universities asked
for criminal proceedings against these professors at a public meeting.
One of them, BP Sharma, Vice Chancellor of Pacific University, a
private university in Udaipur, went to the extent of exhorting the
audience to not rest till the two were punished in an exemplary manner
for their unpardonable act of blasphemy. Sharma also happens to be the
national vice-president of the Swadeshi Jagaran Manch and Prant
Pramukh of Chittor Prant (District head of Chittor) of the RSS. The
Dean of the Arts College of the MS University Farida Shah herself went
to the police station to lodge a complaint against the two teachers
for having hurt the sentiments of people.

Professor Sudha Chaudhary is one of the most active academics in
Mohanlal Sukhadia University, Udaipur, who keeps inviting scholars
from all over India for seminars and lectures to her campus. This is
one of the jobs academics are supposed to perform as part of their
duty – to expose themselves and their students to scholarship outside
their campus. If the department of philosophy at MS University is
known outside, it is largely because of her. She is known as a
left-leaning person. But her politics did not prevent her from
inviting Professor Vohra, who does not share her political views, to
give a lecture on the need to have a dialogue on religion. And he
went. This is how it should be. Scholars with different outlooks meet
each other, exchange views, argue, discuss and debate and refine their
views, if persuaded by other participants. This is how scholarship and
knowledge grow.

Vohra's crime

Profesor Vohra's lecture underlined the need to talk about religions
so as to develop an empathetic understanding of religions other than
one’s own and not try to look at them through analytical categories
constructed in a tradition which which may have nothing in common with
the one under discussion.

Vohra pointed out that every religion has its insiders and outsiders.
An insider is one who believes in its foundational principles, who
follows its rituals and an outsider is a person who does not believe
in all this. But an outsider may approach it as a genuinely curious
observer, from the point of view of a different religion.

He went on to talk about the way foreigners, especially westerners,
have studied Hinduism. He explained, quoting from them extensively to
show that they failed to comprehend the significance of the symbolism
of various Hindu traditions. He also pointed out problems with using
modern systems like psychoanalysis to, for instance, assign sexual
motives to the symbols and rituals which are now part of Hinduism.

Hinduism, Vohra pointed out, is an inclusive religion, which
encompasses contradictory belief systems. The western eye, he said, is
trained in treating everything as discreet entities and is often
puzzled by the "confused" Hindu ways of thinking and imagining the
world and cosmos. The western scholars, he said, have not taken care
to free themselves from their semitic understanding of religion, and
that is why we find them amused or horrified when they come across
Hindu practices or images of gods and goddesses. "Grotesque",
"horrific" or "funny" are the adjectives they use when describing
these traditions, which are very far from their own traditions.

Vohra said that these scholars approach Hindu practices with a bias
that these are primordial and unrefined. Theirs is not a truly
dispassionate, objective approach. That is why they miss the complex
richness of Hindu traditions. Vohra seemed to suggest that their
interpretation is often too hastily, and unjust.

To explain his views, Vohra referred to some of the work he was
talking about and quoted from it. Now this is standard practice and
this is what we do and teach our students to do when discussing the
view point of other scholars. This is also, if one may say, the Indian
way of dialogue or polemics. First present the purva paksh faithfully
and then dispute it or demolish it. This is the methodology of sarva
darshan sangrah.

But just these quotations seem to have became Vohra’s crime. For it is
being charged that he very cunningly used the pretext of discussing
these scholars to actually mouth obscenities about Hindu gods and
goddesses. That he chose to quote them proves that he had an ulterior
motive, it is being alleged. His real objective, it is claimed, was to
denigrate Hindu religion. His act of referring to various Indologists,
it is being projected, was a clever ruse to show “this is what our
Hindu religion is”.

Video clips of Vohra reading from these foreign scholars were
circulated, editing out his criticism of these scholars. It is clear
that the aim was to create hatred against him and the organisers of
the talk among the masses. Would a common person, watching these
edited portions be wrong to believe that it was Vohra who held these
views?

Curtailing thought

It is not difficult to see who is using falsehood and deceit. The real
aim is obviously to disable teachers like Sudha Chaudhary who keep
intellectual discourse alive in the campus by inviting scholars and
intellectuals of different hues. This is obvious from the leaflet
issued by the agitators which names Sudha Chaudhary and some of her
colleagues, charging them with the crime of providing a platform to
"anti-nationals" like Justice Rajinder Sacchar, social scientist Abhay
Kumar Dube, and others.The leaflet laments that even after having a
nationalist government for the last two years  academics like Sudha
Chaudhary are allowed to indulge in such nefarious acts.

What is worrying is that the Dean of the Arts College, instead of
protecting the right of her colleague, went on to lodge a police
complaint against her. The occasion was then used to issue a blanket
order to create a censor-body in the university to keep a check on
scholarly and intellectual activity on the campus.

Heart of India

This tendency is not confined to a state university like the MS
University of Udaipur. A head of department in Delhi University, which
seeks to enter the the list of the top 200 universities of the world,
was asked to ensure, on the eve of a public lecture last week by a
guest speaker,  that there was no anti-national discussion there.
Before that, noted labour historian Dilip Simeon told me that after
his lecture in one of the leading women’s college of Delhi University,
a fiat was issued that all guest lectures would have to be approved
beforehand and an abstract of the same would have to be deposited with
the authorities.

What we are observing is a  silent surrender of the academic
institutions before "nationalist cultural" sentiments.  It means
dumbing down of syllabus, keeping away from "contentious" issues,
disallowing discussion on "uncomfortable" subjects.

I am witness to the reluctance of  my colleagues who bear the
responsibility of heading their departments when approached with
proposal of screening of films like Tamas  or holding a conversation
with a Pakistani diplomat.  We do not get space for "out of syllabus"
activities. The excuse advanced is safety and security of the campus.

The most important aim of education is to enable people to think
courageously.  It is not an exaggeration  to say that universities
have gradually withdrawn from this role.

If we still have young minds who dare to think, it is not because of
the universities – it is in spite of them.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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